![]() In 2002, he was appointed a Research Fellow in Western Esotericism at the University of Lampeter, and then in 2005 he was appointed to a personal chair in the Department of History at Exeter University. In his varied career, Goodrick-Clarke worked as a schoolmaster, banker, and a successful fundraiser for The Campaign for Oxford. Later notable works include his well-regarded Paracelsus: Essential Readings, published in 1990, and Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity, published in 2001. This book has been continually in print since its first publication in 1985, and has been translated into twelve languages. dissertation was the basis for his most celebrated work, The Occult Roots of Nazism. ![]() with a dissertation on the modern Occult Revival and Theosophy at the end of the twentieth century. Edmund Hall, Oxford, Goodrick-Clarke took a D.Phil. ![]() ![]() ![]() He studied German, politics, and philosophy at the University of Bristol, and gained a B.A. Goodrick-Clarke was born in Lincoln, UK, on 15 January 1953, and was an Open Exhibitioner at Lancing College. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke (15 January 1953 – 29 August 2012) was a British historian and professor of Western esotericism at the University of Exeter, best known for his authorship of several scholarly books on the history of Germany between the World Wars and Western esotericism. ![]()
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